Recommend a folding pedal?
#1
Thread Starter
Senior Member
Joined: Jan 2008
Posts: 238
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Recommend a folding pedal?
After almost 4000 miles my right pedal on Dahon D7 is making a clicking noise. I unscrewed it and when I twist the shaft I encounter a little resistance every other revolution. I suppose one ball bearing is broken. Anyone have suggestions for a good replacement from this page:
https://sheldonbrown.com/harris/pedals.html
The AR-2 looks strong, but I am not interested in the clipless feature. Or if anyone has any used Suntour pedal for sale, PM me!
https://sheldonbrown.com/harris/pedals.html
The AR-2 looks strong, but I am not interested in the clipless feature. Or if anyone has any used Suntour pedal for sale, PM me!
#2
Senior Member
Joined: Aug 2005
Posts: 1,319
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From: Vancouver, Washington and Ocean Shores, Washington, USA
Bikes: 2 - 2007 Custom Bike Fridays, 2 - 2009 Bike Friday Pocket 8's, Gravity 29'er SS, 2 - 8-spd Windsor City Bikes, 1973 Raleigh 20 & a 1964 Schwinn Tiger
Have these on our Fridays, with zero problems in the first year.
https://store.bikefriday.com/product_...ducts_id=11655
Have these on my Boardwalk S1 - replaced orig pedals that self-destructed - same result, zero problems.
https://www.performancebike.com/shop/...egory_ID=10045
https://store.bikefriday.com/product_...ducts_id=11655
Have these on my Boardwalk S1 - replaced orig pedals that self-destructed - same result, zero problems.
https://www.performancebike.com/shop/...egory_ID=10045
#3
Thread Starter
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Joined: Jan 2008
Posts: 238
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Thanks, the Friday pedals for $18 look similar to my Suntour OEM pedals on my Dahon. Should I spend more and get better pedals or will these cheaper pedals last just as long? In other words, do more expensive pedals last more than 4000 miles?
#4
I gave up on folding and just went with a pedal with spd on one side and a platform on the other. It is a cheap Wellgo copy of the PD-M324 sold at Performance under the Forte' name. They call them campus pedals. If I need a compact fold I have to take one off, but I seldom do unless I need to pack the bike it the suitcase.
I would by MKS removables and have a set of clip less and a set of platforms, but I refuse to buy the MKS clip less and have yet another pair of shores and cleat system. They should have made them spd compatible like Welgo did with some of their pedals.
I would by MKS removables and have a set of clip less and a set of platforms, but I refuse to buy the MKS clip less and have yet another pair of shores and cleat system. They should have made them spd compatible like Welgo did with some of their pedals.
#5
Drops small screws


Joined: May 2008
Posts: 2,608
Likes: 9
From: NYC Metro Area
Bikes: Soma Grand Randonneur, modified Xootr Swift, Trek 1000SL with broken brifter from running it into a hotel porte-cochère
Here are two crappy cell-phone pics of a pair of VP-117 folding pedals I haven't gotten around to putting on eBay. They probably have 200 miles on them, if that, and they were something like $30 new.
If you want them, send me a big self-addressed, stamped padded envelope and I'll stick them in the mail. Better they get some real use than keep taking up space in this apartment.
If you want them, send me a big self-addressed, stamped padded envelope and I'll stick them in the mail. Better they get some real use than keep taking up space in this apartment.
#7
Drops small screws


Joined: May 2008
Posts: 2,608
Likes: 9
From: NYC Metro Area
Bikes: Soma Grand Randonneur, modified Xootr Swift, Trek 1000SL with broken brifter from running it into a hotel porte-cochère
Don't worry about that. I can mail it from work
PM me and we'll nail down the details.
PM me and we'll nail down the details.
#12
Newbie

Joined: Jul 2008
Posts: 25
Likes: 3
From: Stevenage, UK
Bikes: Specialized Sirrus, Raleigh Sportster,Downtube IXFS (RIP), Brompton S2L
Have you tried dismantling the pedal?
It could just be that a bit of grit has found its way into the pedal - this happened to me. Removed the grit, another dab of lithium grease, reassembled and as good as new.
If a ball bearing has crumbled, just a buy a new set of ball bearings, replace and reassemble with some lithium grease - seems a waste to throwaway a pair of pedals just because of the failiure of one ball? It's not difficult to do, just need to undo a couple of nuts and fiddle with some washers
R
It could just be that a bit of grit has found its way into the pedal - this happened to me. Removed the grit, another dab of lithium grease, reassembled and as good as new.
If a ball bearing has crumbled, just a buy a new set of ball bearings, replace and reassemble with some lithium grease - seems a waste to throwaway a pair of pedals just because of the failiure of one ball? It's not difficult to do, just need to undo a couple of nuts and fiddle with some washers
R
#13
multimodal commuter
Joined: Nov 2006
Posts: 19,810
Likes: 597
From: NJ, NYC, LI
Bikes: 1940s Fothergill, 1959 Allegro Special, 1963? Claud Butler Olympic Sprint, Lambert 'Clubman', 1974 Fuji "the Ace", 1976 Holdsworth 650b conversion rando bike, 1983 Trek 720 tourer, 1984 Counterpoint Opus II, 1993 Basso Gap, 2010 Downtube 8h, and...
I have a pair that have almost a year of riding on them, so about 3000 miles. I had to overhaul one of them a couple months back, though. On one hand, I didn't think that should be necessary so soon; on the other hand, at least it was possible to overhaul the pedal. Other than that, I don't like them very much, for a couple reasons:
--they unfold themselves at inopportune moments, like when I'm walking with the bike folded in a crowd getting on an escalator to the train platform.
--even when folded, they're pretty wide
--very slippery, especially when wet; hard to keep your feet on 'em, depending on your shoes, of course
--they unfold themselves at inopportune moments, like when I'm walking with the bike folded in a crowd getting on an escalator to the train platform.
--even when folded, they're pretty wide
--very slippery, especially when wet; hard to keep your feet on 'em, depending on your shoes, of course
#14
How about a removable pedal? MKS makes a pedal that has a quick release feature, pull back the ring and the pedal comes right off.
Its great for travel, makes the bike less attractive to thieves that want to ride off on a stolen bike and since it comes in platform or clipless, you can switch pedal types in an instant.
Its great for travel, makes the bike less attractive to thieves that want to ride off on a stolen bike and since it comes in platform or clipless, you can switch pedal types in an instant.
#15
Thread Starter
Senior Member
Joined: Jan 2008
Posts: 238
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Have you tried dismantling the pedal?
It could just be that a bit of grit has found its way into the pedal - this happened to me. Removed the grit, another dab of lithium grease, reassembled and as good as new.
If a ball bearing has crumbled, just a buy a new set of ball bearings, replace and reassemble with some lithium grease - seems a waste to throwaway a pair of pedals just because of the failiure of one ball? It's not difficult to do, just need to undo a couple of nuts and fiddle with some washers
R
It could just be that a bit of grit has found its way into the pedal - this happened to me. Removed the grit, another dab of lithium grease, reassembled and as good as new.
If a ball bearing has crumbled, just a buy a new set of ball bearings, replace and reassemble with some lithium grease - seems a waste to throwaway a pair of pedals just because of the failiure of one ball? It's not difficult to do, just need to undo a couple of nuts and fiddle with some washers
R
#16
multimodal commuter
Joined: Nov 2006
Posts: 19,810
Likes: 597
From: NJ, NYC, LI
Bikes: 1940s Fothergill, 1959 Allegro Special, 1963? Claud Butler Olympic Sprint, Lambert 'Clubman', 1974 Fuji "the Ace", 1976 Holdsworth 650b conversion rando bike, 1983 Trek 720 tourer, 1984 Counterpoint Opus II, 1993 Basso Gap, 2010 Downtube 8h, and...
My Strida has different pedals, which also have the two metal studs; but these have a pronounced head, which suggests they're more like rivets; so they wouldn't press out so easily (or at all).
So... take a look, and see what you think. I'd suggest you try opening up the pedal, but only after you're quite sure the warranty is already used up and the pedal is not going to last much longer as is.
#17
Senior Member
Joined: Oct 2007
Posts: 747
Likes: 43
From: NW
Bikes: To many to list. I like them all!
I like the MKS EXY Pomenade https://www.universalcycles.com/shopp...s.php?id=19659 and MKS EZY Cube https://bikesonline.com/MKS-EZY-inch-...Y-adapters.htm






